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Hal |
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Surprisingly,
this is not related to my heart failure, except perhaps
as one of many causes leading to it.
When a lad
of 12, my parents did the fashionable thing. They took me
to a doctor for a sore throat. He did the fashionable thing.
He recommended a tonsillectomy. During that surgery, the
anesthetic (ether) got overlooked. That I did not know until
much later.
When I saw
a movie entitled, "Beyond and Back," I realized for the
first time that my experience was more than a hallucination
brought on by my medication during surgery. In an effort
to recall more of the event, I began studying meditation
techniques. After a while I got good enough at visualization
that I felt my own imagination might begin to embellish
my recall. At that point, I quit adding little remembered
pieces to the written account.
My first
awareness was a view of my body as a field of twinkling
lights. I noticed that each nerve would flash brightly and
then be seen no more. Soon, my body looked very sparsely
defined. I felt at that time that I might be dying. Not
much later, my hands and feet were gone altogether and my
midsection was getting sparse. The feeling was very peaceful.
More peaceful than I had ever known. I seemed to be shrinking
to a ball shape centered near my throat. Would I lose consciousness
as the ball of active nerves shrank past the boundaries
of my cranial cavity. As I pondered the idea, I fell through
the surface of the operating table.
"Oh no!"
I thought. "If I re-materialize here, I'll be trapped in
the mechanism. I have to get out of here!"
With that
thought, I felt motion, a sensation of immense speed. Before
me was a field of bright points of light rushing by. As
each point passed by, it reddened and went out. I quickly
figured the speed required to make that happen -- the speed
of light. I was perceiving the matter passing by as light.
I concluded that I was going so fast because the remnant
of physical matter with me, could not follow and the purpose
of this was to finish the separation of body and spirit.
Then I realized how far I must be getting from home.
"I MUST STOP
OR I'LL NEVER FIND MY WAY BACK!", I thought emphatically.
And stop I did.
The matter,
formerly perceived as light, was now dark. All was darkness.
Try as I could, I could neither see nor feel myself nor
anything else. I took care not to lose track of which way
was "back" because I was still interested in going there.
Try as I could, I could perceive no response to my attempts
to move. Carefully, I turned about to look back along the
path I had come. There was nothing to be seen, nor heard,
felt, nor smelled. I was alone. I wondered why I wasn't
afraid.
I wondered
if the blackness was all there would be. I'd have to make
do with my memories and imagination. Did I have enough memories
to last an eternity? I'd know when they ran out, that was
certain.
A brief flash
of light occurred behind me as I studied my reverse course.
I spun about to look for it, but all was still darkness.
I returned to my musings. Strange how logical I could be.
I could determine if any proposition were correct or incorrect,
or that I needed more information before it could be decided.
I was absorbed in thought when a faint glimmer of light
came again. It was gone as quickly as it came. I strained
to see. No, it wasn't there. Perhaps it was a product of
wishful thinking.
I had willed
to stop most forcefully, and it became so. Maybe all it
took was more will to move. I tried to summon more will.
Then came
another brief burst of dim light. Perhaps there was something
out here after all. My eyes must be adjusting to darkness.
While waiting for more light to appear, I returned to my
musings. Soon there was another glimmer of light and it
was noticeably stronger than before, but very short-lived.
I had hope. That was good, since I had lost track of which
way was "back."
The dim light
became brighter and more steady. It seemed very distant.
I wondered how I might go in that direction. Will seemed
ineffective. I tried swimming motions, but that didn't work
either.
The light
was getting stronger. I wondered how might I get its attention
- if it had any attention to be gotten. It seemed to be
moving slightly. Maybe even coming my way? I watched and
waited. Closer it came. Again I wondered about attracting
its attention. Did I want its attention? Yes. It was the
only other thing present in the darkness.
It was coming
my way and would probably pass near. I could observe it.
Would it see me? I couldn't see me, so it was not much cause
to think it would either. Nearer it came, and brighter.
In its light I could dimly see myself. Closer and brighter
it came. It was headed right for me. I tried to get out
of its way, but nothing changed. The light grew very bright
and I tried to look away. A strange light, it shone into
my eyes no matter which way I looked. I turned to face the
oncoming light.
Now it was
so bright that I feared its intensity. I raised my arm to
shield my eyes. The light passed right through my arm, more
intense than ever.
"Stop!",
I thought. "STOP, I'LL BE INJURED!"
And the light
replied, "I will not harm you."
These were
not words but thoughts which passed between us.
Still closer
and brighter the light came. I strained to detect its surface
but could not. It was about the size of a beach ball, with
no discernible surface.
I asked,
"Who or What are you?"
It replied,
"That's not important right now. You are not where it is
expected to find anyone."
I gave my
name and insisted upon reciprocity as a courtesy. And was
rebuffed again.
The Being
of Light (I lack a better description.) began to look through
my life. It simply shone into me and scenes from my life
projected around me as if I were seeing them again. It was
a lot like looking at a hologram, but full color 3D with
sound and scent.
We flitted
from scene to scene - sometimes on fast-forward - sometimes
pausing to note some major or minor detail. When we paused
at the first deed of which I was ashamed, I started to make
an excuse. To no avail. My motives were as visible as my
actions. On went the movie. I must be dead, I thought. People
say your life flashes before your eyes when that happens.
"I was snapped back to the task
at hand - the life review. It was judgment to be sure, but
more like fact-finding than fault-finding. The only condemnation
was me regretting some of my mistakes.
"Then the
movie stopped abruptly. The end of my life had been reached.
The Being of Light was surprised and I felt it. There was
something missing.
The Being
of Light said, "Come with me. We have to find out what went
wrong."
But I can't
make myself move," I complained. "I can handle that."
"Come," said
the Being of Light.
With no movement
at all, we were now at a large library. The one who had
been doing my life review was no longer a ball of light
but now a hooded and robed figure. And still inscrutable.
"Look what
I found out there," it said to the library staff.
One of the
clerks went to large bead rack, much like an abacus, and
began calculating. One clerk wore a short robe with a classic
Greek pattern decorating the lower edge. His robe had a
hood, as did the robes of all the others. I concluded that
his hood was not for warmth and asked my guide.
The guide
confirmed my observation, the hoods were not for warmth.
When I pushed to know the purpose of the hoods I was informed
that I would know when it was time to have that information.
I sensed that my guide disapproved of the non-traditional
attire, but had no cause to criticize as the work done by
that individual was always excellent.
Another clerk
observed the placement of the beads on the top row and thought,
"Oh, no! The Old section."
That was
clay tablets to be moved and sorted through.
A moment
later, two of the beads in the top row were moved again.
It would be in the section written on hides stretched over
wooden frames. Much easier to sort through.
When the
calculation finished, we set off through the stacks counting
rows as we went. I observed stacked sheets of papyrus, then
scrolls. Then came rows with stacked wooden frames. We passed
these quickly and came to a row with hides stretched over
sticks. A clerk was now counting bays, then shelves, then
hides. One hide was selected and pulled from the stack.
Another clerk carefully counted the entries until he found
the right one.
The writing
was like none I'd seen before. It reminded me a bit of Hebrew
and runic writing. I couldn't read it. But I could read
the mind of my guide! Hah! Blocked. I tried to read it through
one of the clerks. Frustrated again. I tried to memorize
the shapes of the letters but was frustrated there as well.
My guide informed me that I wasn't supposed to know what
the entry said. I asked what was I allowed to know? I was
informed that the entry described my life. It was hardly
larger than a business card.
"That's all
my life is?" I wanted to know.
"Much more
than that," I was told.
"How so?"
I asked.
"People always
do the best they can with the materials and information
at hand. If an individual's resources are known, then the
resulting choices can be anticipated."
"So much
for choice; everything is pre-determined," I thought.
"Not so,"
my guide said. "Almost all of your choices are free. It
is the drive to do well which limits what you will choose.
And it makes you predictable."
"What, then,
does the writing on the hide represent?" I asked.
"A major
choice which is not predetermined by your resources."
"What sort
of choice is it?"
"Knowledge
of the choice would affect your decision."
"Then I'd
get it right, so tell me."
"That would
interfere with your free will."
Round we
went. Free will was something they would apparently bend
heaven and Earth to protect. The decision I was to make
must be my own free choice.
"Will I know
it is the one, once I've made it?"
"Perhaps."
I noticed
that this was nothing like I had been taught in Sunday School.
I wondered if they really didn't know. Certainly, they had
done nothing to prepare me for this experience.
Then they
got into a hushed discussion of what to do about me. I caught
snippets of the conversation.
"He has to
reach a certain level of maturity in order to make the decision
correctly."
"If they
put me into another body, it would be hard to get the right
sort of parents."
"Then, arranging
the life experiences which would lead up to the decision
would be very difficult to do in the remaining time.
"How about
putting him back where he came from? His body is badly damaged.
Can we fix it?"
"Yes, but
we'll have to change his life's affliction."
"But, they
cure that in his time!"
"Yes, but
not before its done it's job."
My next recollection
was of feeling VERY sick. I thought I was still dying. Actually,
I was beginning to recover. Ether can give one a truly vile
hangover.
Conjecture:
Since I was a severe asthmatic as a child, my blood had
adapted to significant oxygen deficit. That made me more
resistant to the anesthetic. That broke the pattern of events
in surgery and resulted in the ether drip being forgotten.
That, in turn, resulted in an overdose of ether. I have
no evidence to support this conjecture except recalling
that they had wheeled me into the operating room and were
most surprised when I asked a coherent question. They expected
me to be "out." The near-death experience is circumstantial
evidence that something went wrong during surgery. The ether
is my best guess.
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Near-Death Experiences
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